The Prophet, the Gold and the Transylvanians
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Profetul, aurul și ardelenii The Prophet, the Gold and the Transylvanians | |
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Directed by | Dan Pița |
Written by | Titus Popovici |
Starring | Ilarion Ciobanu Ovidiu Iuliu Moldovan Mircea Diaconu Victor Rebengiuc Vasile Nițulescu Tatiana Filip |
Cinematography | Nicolae Mărgineanu |
Edited by | Cristina Ionescu |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Româniafilm |
Release date |
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Running time | 98 minutes |
Country | Romania |
Languages | Romanian, English |
The Prophet, the Gold and the Transylvanians (Romanian: Profetul, aurul și ardelenii) is a 1978 Romanian film directed by Romanian director Dan Pița. It is the first in a Red Western trilogy that also comprises The Artiste, the Dollars and the Transylvanians and The Oil, the Baby and the Transylvanians. The film's dialogue is in English and Romanian.
Plot
[edit]The mining town of Cedar City, Utah, is ruled by Mr. Walthrope, a polygamous Mormon prophet (Victor Rebengiuc), his son the marshall (Gheorghe Visu) and their band of ruffians. John Brad (Ovidiu Iuliu Moldovan) is falsely accused of shooting a gunfighter sent against him by the prophet in the back and has to flee. Meanwhile, a train brings Jeff Groghan (Ferenc Bács ), a gunfighter called by Walthrope, and two Transylvanian immigrants, Traian (Ilarion Ciobanu) and Romulus Brad (Mircea Diaconu), who come to meet their brother John. Traian speaks only Romanian and Romulus tries to get by with his dictionary.
On the station, Grogham is received with a gunfight and Traian has occasion to fire his Turkish gun, booty from the siege of Plevna. Upon arrival to the saloon, Traian is invited to play poker with Groghan, a former Confederate officer still in grey uniform and another man. Traian manages to win many dollars and Bob (Ahmed Gabbany), the slave of the Confederate officer.
The fun is interrupted by the arrival of the prophet. With very limited command of English, the Brads tell him that they are looking for John, whose face they see on wanted posters. They are judged by the innocuous drunkard Dolittle (Vasile Nițulescu ) who sentences them to hanging but the prophet takes them to his farm, where they toil as farm hands.
The Brads and Bob escape and live in a hut under the Romanian flag where they fish and find gold nuggets. John tries to organize the miners against the prophet who sets the prices and takes their gold away to Salt Lake City, but the miners prefer to let things stay as they are.
Later, Walthrope's men assault one man and his daughter that is rescued by John Brad. John and the girl finally reach the Brads' hut. They team together to stop the party that carries the miners' gold stolen by the Mormons.
In the ensuing gunfight, the Brads win and successfully defend the miners' camp against the whole Walthrope band. Walthrope is captured and the Brads, Bob and the girl ride into the sunset.
Cast
[edit]- Ilarion Ciobanu – Traian Brad
- Ovidiu Iuliu Moldovan – Johnny Brad
- Mircea Diaconu – Romulus Brad
- Victor Rebengiuc – Ezekiel Waltrope (The Prophet)
- Vasile Nițulescu – Judge Dolittle
- Gheorghe Visu – Marshall Joshua Waltrope
- Zoltán Vadász – Colonel J. Anderson
- Olga Tudorache – Sarah Waltrope
- Clody Bertola – (a Lady in the train)
- Ferenc Bács – Jeff Groghan
- Tatiana Filip – June Ambler
External links
[edit]- 1978 films
- 1970s Western (genre) comedy films
- 1970s Romanian-language films
- 1970s English-language films
- English-language Romanian films
- Fiction about polygamy
- The Transylvanians series
- Films directed by Dan Pița
- Films about Mormonism
- Iron County, Utah
- Films set in Utah
- Films about prophets
- 1978 comedy films
- Mormonism in fiction
- 1978 multilingual films
- Romanian multilingual films
- Foreign films set in the United States
- English-language Western (genre) comedy films